WANT ADS. "THEY HAVE PAID OTHERS, THEY WILL PAY YOU." Advertisement* appearing under this head, set in this type, are charged for at the following rate; ten cents per line for the first week and five cents per line per week thereafter.' Advertisements under this head are payable in advance, cash with copy. The amount charged for any ad can easily be ascertained by counting the words and allowing six words to the line. HOLSTEIN COW AND CALF FOR sale. For further information ap ply to E. Modlin, Ahoskie, Route 3. 6-16-4 t-pd.x ? ?' ? r? ? ? , : V/INDOW SASHES AND GLASS for sale. Due to remodelling our office we have left over about 17 window sashes with glass, both in good condition. Site of glass 10x12 inches?9 panes of glass to each single sash. Will take $10 for the entire lot or $1 for single sash. Applymhe Herald office. WANTED! WANTED!! WANTED!!! The HERALD wants your printing for 1922; and/, if you give it to them, they'll give you entire sat isfaction and the price will suit you on every job. Give them a triul. NOTICE?MONEY IS EASY TO OB tain on improved lands, provided the borrowers do not want to ex ceed sixty per cent of its value, disregarding war-time prices. J"or particulars see, Roswell C. Bridger, Representative Chicmauga Trust Company, Winton, N. C. F17 tf. NOTICE OF SALE In the District Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of North Carolina. In the matter of HELEN BEN THAL, Bankrupt. Under the power vested in me as Trustee of ,the above named bank rupt, and in pursuance of an order made by Marshal! C. Staton, Esq., Referee in Bankruptcy, in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the place of business for merly occupied by Helen Benthal in the town of Ahoskie, on Tuesday, June 37th, 1922, at 12 o'clock A. M., the stock of goods, wares and mer chandise, fixtures and accounts be longing to the estate of said Helen Benthal, Bankrupt. The said goods, wares ahd merchandise inventory 31,702.92; the fixtures at $221.61; and said inventory can be seen at the office of the Trustee in Ahoskie. Sale will be made subject to confirmation by Referee. , This the 16th day of June, 1922. L. C. WILLIAMS, Trustee. 6-23-lt. NOTICE OF RE-SALE OF LAND .Under Deed of Trust. By virtue of the power and authority conferred upon me by a certain Deed of Trust executed by Scarboro Barrett to me, the undersigned trustee, on the 9th day of July, 1920, and recorded in the office of Register of Deeds for Hertford County, N. C., in Book 65,1 page 422, I will offer for sale to the highest bidder for caah, in front of the Post Office in the Town of Mur freesboro, N. C., between the houra of 11 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. on the 15th day of July, the follow ing real property, to-wit: The brick house and lot situate in the town of Murfreesboro, N. C., now occupied by J. A. Campbell as s residence, bounded by Williams, Fifth and Broad Streets of said town and by 41m lands of Harry N. Deans, and known as the old "Peter Williams Horn Place." ' f^| This June 10th, IMS. STANLEY WINBORNE, Tilt IA 6-23-41. f raimi GOLDSJI CHEST Ease your light, aching chest, Stop the pain. Break up the congestion. Feel a bad cold loosen up in just a short time. ? v_ "Red Pepper Rub" is the cold rem edy that brings Quickest relief. It can not hart you and it certainly seems to end the tightness and drive the conges tion and soreness right out. Nothing hat such concentrated, pen etrating heat as red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down into colds, congestion, aching muscles and tore, stiff joints relief comes at ooce. The moment you apply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat In three minutes the congested not is warmed through and through. When you are ?nfftrtng from a cold, rheumatism, backache, stiff neck or sore muscles. a get a jar of Rowlcs Red 1'epper made from red peppers, at any ESkfEEnt **" ** ***** a II ? I. ? ? g Spraying walnut troo? with lead arsenate at a strength of ? ponds to fifty gallons of water 1% an effective method of controlling the butternut curculio, says the Bu reau of Entomology of the United States Department of Agriculture. ? ?' '? M r~ V . - lTBlBt' ?xi6e BATTERIES If your present battery can be repaired at a cost that is orcnomiral to you, we will not toy to sell you a new one. When you must buy?buy ? m. J. S. Deans ?- ? ~ Distributor Ahoskie, N. C. ' ? _______________ H^?ESEB3IK j* .. HI u DELINQUENT TAX LIST WHITE The following property will be sold for taxes on Saturday. July 8th, 1922. E. J. Bell, home 62.45 Z. V. Bellamy, home 98.07 J. L. Bellamy, home 71.97 Bellamy A Co., lot on Main Street 74.87 G. F. Burgess, home 21.24 R. R. Copeland, home 73.39 M. Earley, home... 1?60.58 J. T. Earley, home 45.06 J. A. Eley, home ? 65.45 'Farmers Tobacco Warehouse. 106.25^ J. J. Hayes, home. _ ? 17.00 John W. Howard, home. 28.89 F. L. Howard, home. 45.56 James Jenkins, vacant lot 12.49 L. M. Mitchell, home 157.79 Newsome A Holloman, Leary lot 33.36 J. W. Powell and wife, home. 206.35 Powell A Jinkins, Brett lot 7.34 Powell A Sessoms, Powell lot. 21.24 J. H. Robertson, home.. 51.05 Nina Rogers 93.50 H. E. Rowe, lot D, heights.. 2.00 L. T. Sumner, home... 146.22 L. K. Walker, home 87.61 Branning Mfg. Co. 672.19 COLORED H. S. Boone, Mitchell St 5.00 Wm. Boone, Estate, Newsome lot . 2.44 Mary E. Burke, home 13.50 W. A. Chavis, home r 22.74 Junius Deloach, Sessoms ft Britt ?l 19.92 Flora Everett, vacant 2.02 Herbert Freeman, Garrett 7.12 Godwin Futrell, Washington Avenue .. 8.39 J. A. Hall, Lawrence 20.49 Geo. H. Harrell, home 13.50 John W. Hayes, home.!..? 13.60 W. F. Huson, Maple St... 13.50 Will Home, home 13.23 Robt. Howard, Willoughby ? 6.70 Qunt Jenkins, Maple St 11.36 W. J. Jenkins, home 18.42 Alfred Est. Jenkins, Maple street ?? lu.iu John D. Jenkins, home? 4.15 Nancy J. Keen, home 10.10 J. W. Lawrence, home.... 10.80 A. R. Lewis, home 18.85 Virgina Little, Catherine St.. 7.12 Andrew Marsh, home 7.12 Geno Newsome, Catherine St. 18.24 Jeff Newsome, Garrett 15.64 Absilla Overton, Maple St... 15.40 Gurney Peele, home 18.70 L. A. Peele, Maple. 6.86 Henry Peele, Maple and vacant 4.67 Haywood Peele, Rue St. 11.81 John Porter, J, A P. 4.57 E. T. Powell, home... 25.18 Mrs. E. T. Powell, Garrett 2.46 W. R. Scott, home 12.08 J R. Scott, Lawrence 10.20 Guss Seaaoms, Catherine and Maple ?.... 28.06 Drew Sessoms, home and vacant 6.70 Peter Vaughan, Garrett 6.85 C. E. Vaughan, home 10.80 Robert Vaughan, Maple 5.85 Sally Weaver, J. P. 5.69 Willie B. Whitley, Garrett 6.00 Mary Wiggans, Phelps....:.. 9.95 This 8th day of June, 1922. O. H. BUTTON, Chief of Police. Town ?t AfcMfcta. I I I ?EgS FROSTINGS < ?y ELSIE ANDERSON KEEJEETO;iBiaCS!K>:MKWaCWhMMWtB> 1111 b| McClur. Nswspapar araSlcai. ? Nary stood oaek anil regarded bet finished handiwork. 1U king waa per fect. winding in spirals and circlee over the while surface, gn Intricate .pattern, worked with the cunning of au experienced hand. Xet there was distaste rather than satisfaction In hei look. "Ail this wasted on a birthday cake." she muttered to herself resentfully, "when I'd give everything to bp work ing on the Cashinan order I" "That Cashman order" was the larg est which had come to the Cooks' ca tering establishment In many a day? an order for ? wedding rake so 'gor geous as to embody the wildest visions of any baker. It was to' be garnished by s tower of frosting, with a fairy white wedding bell, all so fancifully, delicately fashioned as to suggest spun glass. Nr. Cook himself was even now superintending the baking of the skeleton; an tionor befitting a Cook cake that waa to grace the most lmuortant weddln* of the aeaann I Mary'a eyes were dreamy m she watched the process. Rouutuce had somehow passed her by lu her 24 hard-working years, and she had fall en Into the habit of spending her starved little heart out on these con fectionery creations which'witnessed the happy consummation of other peo ple's loves. How she sentimentalised over even the most- modest cake that \as to adorn the wedding breakfast of some obscure little bride! Every crystal quirk was a symbol of a po tential love which found its outlet In this pseudo romance. Birthday cakes were different?and special favors like that batch of trye rose cups that she had ' finished yesterday. And now site was missing the Cash man cake, the most tantallslngly beau tiful cake of the year; while Mr. Oook, who thought only in terms of dough and icings, to whom the beauty of a wedding meant onlj- one more plume In the cap df "Cook?the Caterer. Or ders Filled Without Delay"?he wan to fashion that white crystal tower with his capable, unimaginative hands! Slift could have cried. It was like missing a brief love adventure of her own, somehow?a tragedy in her nar row, cheated life. Suddenly Mary dropped her work, inspired. The thought was a mad one, but she did not stop to ponder Its ad visability. She knew that Mr. Oook was to supply 15 maids for the wed ding breakfast Service. If she could | be one of them, to catch an Intimate glimpse of the tilings she had visual ised so often?the radiant bride, the groom, the guests, and the cake, mo mentarily the center of attraction, proudly, beautifully perfect! Mr. Cook, resplendent In his starched whiteness, was in excellent humor. ** I' "Well, well, Mary?what can I do for yon?" he asked, rubbing his bands in a genial way that he had. "I want you to send me to the Cash man wedding," she told him, -breath lessly afraid he would refuse. "I can serve quite well?and I have finished that birthday cake order for Mra. Ellis. I?I really wish to go very much." "All right, then," he was good-na turedly amused at her insistence. "Watklns Is to be head waiter. Yon can see him about your uniform." So It came about quite naturally that Mary tasted a bit of the frost Ings of I^fe first hand. She trod the tiled floors of the spacious kitchen and butler's pantry and the deep-napped carpets of the outer rooms, perfectly content in simply being there. She was airing her stifled love of beauty. The wedding party bad not yet arrived and Mary's heart beat wildly with an ticipation. She was tremendously ex cited over the tiny part which she was to pluy in this sumptuous setting. She fluttered back and forth between the pantry and the dining hall, with cut glass and silver. Intensely alive to the beauty of every appointment. ? But the excitement qtood her In poor stead. A slip of the hand, a crash of tlnkUng glass, and a deep red stain of fruit juice crept Sown the white front of her uniform! She had come so far, but she was not to serve, after all 1 The wedding breakfast would go on as though she were back at Cook's, frosting birthday cake after birthday cake. Tears of disappoint ment blinded her so that she could not help In the kitchen. She made her way to a corner by the laundry chute, and It was there that Watklns found her, a doleful, huddled, sobbing slip of a girl. He bad never especially noticed her before; but there was an appeal about her grief tbat quickened hla Interest, lie tried awkwardly, to console her. And she bad never particularly noticed him before, perhaps because he hadn't noticed lier. Now she found blm In teresting, In a six-foot, manly way; so she permitted herself to be consoled? not too suddenly, but by degrees, so that they were laughing like old friends at her predicament; when he had to leave her to go on duty. "Remember," he warned her as lie left, "I shall be back as soon jts 1 run get away, and If I And any more tears I shall prescribe ? dinner for two a* mi antidote. While If you're good?" he went away with a mysterious wag of the head as to what her reward was to be. Mary sat down to wait, tbe master ?;nke In tbe other roein completely for gotten. She had something better, t. dream of, near?a touch of romauct. trst "hand? a bit of life's frosting! -J?? ^ J- - - HAVE NO WORRY ABOUT DATES i In Fortunate Albania Thay Kmw Noth ing of Inch Things as Calen dars or Cteefca. Calendars and clocka are tuxurlea In Albania. Hie untutored peasantry know only throe periods of time? morning, noon and night, and two sea sons of the year, winter and summer. Days and dates are Sanskrit to them. Nor hare they any conception of dis tances. When a traveler asks an Al banian the distance of one point from another, be never answers In miles or kilometers, bnt "It Is half a day, it la two days. It Is a week." When an Al banian makes an appointment, he Is considered to have kept It If he comes within two or three hoars of the time set. With the absehce of calendars, the people naturally do not know their correct ages, especially those In the country districts. In this respect the women of Albania enjoy an advantage over their sisters In foreign countries who guard so jealously the secret of their years. Often the age ef an Al banian woman Us unknown even to herself. Revised Agss of Man. At Klve?Nobody loves me. I'm go ing oat In the garden and eat worms. At Fifteen?She does not love me. I shall hang myself in her father'a garage. At Twenty?The world does not un derstand nje. Life la a failure. At Thirty-live?-Why didn't I marry Mahel Instead of Helen. Mabel always understood me. At Forty-Five?Now, If I were Presi dent of tl\y United States I would? At Sixty?This Isn't such a bad old world after all. At Seventy?1 expect to see a great Improvement in conditions In the next 20 or 90 years. At Klghty?Johnny, tell your mother that her grandma and I have gone to the cabaret.?New York Sun. Arabe Use Opium Bait * A novel way of catching tlsh by Arabs was described by Lieutenant Commander A. S. Elwell-Sutton In de scribing the worh of the British gun- . boats oa the river Tigris above Bagdad. The natives, there, he said, laid a ground bait of luinpa of dough con taining a small quantity of opium. The fish swallowed that and, becoming stu pefied, floated about with their white bellies uppermost. Arabs went In pur suit of them on blown-out sheepskins which they maneuvered with their feet while the hands were free to hold the landing net. To Mako Scientific Investigations. Mountain miners In the Andes do heavy lalwr in a rs re tied atmosphere that makes the silthbest effort fa tiguing to neweomers. Says the 8cl ent'ttc American, and Canadian acl entists are In Peru to discover whether this immunity of the miners is due to changes In the blood or to other functions. The scientists will yield their own blood, both at sea level and at three-miles altitude, and the samples will go to our universities for analysis. . . || Francs Encourages Aviation France recognizes the value .<f air travel and its Importance to the future. She has. budgeted 154,878.0(10 francs for civilian aviation for the year l!K?h Naturally, purls la the great center of French commercial aviation, the Is* Bourget airdrome In the suburbs taking on the appearance of a busy railway terminal. Airplanes to and from Lon don, (live departures dally) and Brus sels "rtrry tbejargest number of pas sengers. c n HERRING-JERNIGAN The following invitation has been received at the Herald office and will be of interest to the many friends of the contracting couple in this section who extend their congratu lations and good wishes. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Herring request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter Effie Mae t to Mr. Kenneth Rupert JeYnigan *"* Thursday evening, June the ft s.twenty-ninth l#neteen hundred and twenty-two at seven o'clock Aulander Baptist Church Aulander, North Carolina At Home After July 8th 0 Prices of dairy and poultry pro ducts suffered the least in the rapid deflation of prices of farm products which began in 1020 and continued through 1921, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Annie W. Fairless, deceased late of Hertford county, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased to exhibit them to the under signed at Harrellsville, N. C., R. F. D., 1, on or before the 16th day of June, 1923, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 16th day of June, 1922. L. W. SAUNDERS, : Administrator of Annie W. Fairless. 6-16-6t-f>d. % ' II I I II f, ' 0 ' Mr. Merchant ? When you buy your Groceries from us you are ' assured that you are receiving nothing but the very best and the freshest, as our stock is re* plenished every few days and nothing is kept on hand long enough to get stale. You are also assured that nothing will be in bad condition when it reaches you, as we are right here at home and it takes only a short time for the goods to reach you. The saving in freight by buying in large quantities enables us to sell much cheaper than tfce average wholesale houses, and you also save a big per cent of high freight when you buy from us, as we are located right here with you P ' C Telephone Your Orders to Barnes-Sawyer Gro cery Co. Inc. Ahoslde, - N. C. mmmJ ? Sessoms & Forbes Garage AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING Batterr Charging and Vulcanising Ahoskie, N. C Our service has a guarantee behind it and gives Satisfaction to the most particular customer. Buy your oils, Gas, and Auto Accessories Here FREE AIR AND WATER - "?-U 1 '-if f '.,M" 1 mi HI IIM I???trnm+mmm | Lehigh Portland Cement Liberal Quantity Discounts I Special Price to the | Wholesale Trade I I J. N. VANN & BROTHER I | ^ Ahoskie, N. C. | Shoe Repairing By Parcel Post No matter where you live you can enjoy all the service of a modern, electrically equipped,*, shoe repairing plant. We c&n make your old shoes look like new ones. Just mail them to us by Parcel Post, we will repair them and mail them back in one day. We do the work with factory machines and use only the best materials. Tickets for free shines will be sent you?to use when you visit Norfolk. UNITED 1 SHOE REPAIRING CORPORATION Norfolk Braifch 118?ATLANTIC STREET?115 Betweea Main Street asd the Pestefice SUBSCRIBE TO THE HERALD?$1.50 PER YEAR .?? ' ' < V 'rt: V '*.' ' '* ,,'v ' _-y.; , %

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view